Standard glass-tube televisions and your CRT monitor work quite similarly. A glass cathode-ray tube (1), which contains a vacuum, has threeelectron guns (2) at its narrow end, each containing an anode and cathode assembly. As you may recall from high-school science, the cathodes emit electrons; the anodes draw the electrons away from the cathodes, focusing and accelerating them into electron beams (3). Thedeflection yoke (4), around the tube base, precisely manipulates the three beams via electromagnetic force, working with the CRT's circuitry to sweep them across the screen in precise, horizontal lines. Where a beam hits the screen, it causes a red, green, or blue (RGB) phosphor dot(5) to glow; the screen's inner surface is coated with these colored phosphors. (The beams, though colorized in the illustration, are actually invisible.)
CRTs come in two main varieties: shadow mask and aperture grill. In shadow-mask models, the RGB phosphors on the inside of the screen are arranged as a staggered pattern of dots (see the inset); in the latter, they're not dots but repeating vertical RGB stripes. In a shadow-mask CRT, when the monitor receives commands from your PC's graphics adapter, the electron guns fire their three beams, in concert, through tiny holes in the shadow mask (6), a metal screen just behind the phosphor-coated display glass. (Aperture-grill monitors, popularly known as Trinitrons or Diamondtrons, work similarly, but vertical wires, not a mask, funnel the beams.) Their channeled beams illuminate a trio of phosphor dots (a triad(7)) lining the inside of the glass. A pixel (8)-the smallest image element you can see-comprises one or more triads; how many depends on the resolution you specify. The lower the resolution, the more triads that are assigned to each pixel.
The electron guns blaze across the screen, row by row, illuminating phosphors in their wake. Varying the beams' intensity strengthens or weakens the glow from a given phosphor dot; by careful manipulation of every one, the triads and pixels, seen by the eye as single units, create the illusion of different-color dots.
Phosphors don't glow for long, though. Once the guns have scanned the whole screen, they repeat the process-typically, 60 to 80 times a second. (This number is what is known as the refresh rate.) To comprehend the staggering scale of the task: A CRT running at 1,280x1,024 at a 75Hz refresh rate illuminates and re-illuminates nearly 100 million pixels per second.
In a shadow mask CRT, electron beams are focused by a magnetic field onto phosphor dots on the screen. The shadow mask, a perforated metal sheet located in front of the phosphor layer, ensures that each beam only hits its corresponding colored phosphor dot, creating the desired color image when the phosphors emit light upon being struck by electrons. This method enables the CRT to display color images by combining the emissions from red, green, and blue phosphors.
The rain shadow equals rain
It depends on the lighting. If there is no lighting, then no shadow. can any one explain me what is light?
because
Solar - moons shadow falls on earth.Lunar - earths shadow falls on moon.
kill your self
In the southern hemisphere, the shortest shadow during the day will point North
The height of the object casting the shadow, the height of the sun in the sky, what angle you are at when looking at the shadow.
Shadow is an alien-hedgehog clone made in a space station, and Rouge is a treasure hunting bat. They both started out working for Dr. Eggman, but in recent games they are working for GUN and have become good guys. Shadow and Rouge are neutral.
hard to explain just read it
there are 2 shadows the hodgohs. 1 android working for eggman.And the 2 the real shadow got married to rouge:o
No.
That is called a solar eclipse. The light of the sun is blocked by the moon, and the earth briefly is in the dark.